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1966 Porsche 912 Swb Matching Numbers Running Engine To Restore on 2040-cars

Year:1966 Mileage:62000 Color: Red /
 Black
Location:

College Point, New York, United States

College Point, New York, United States
Advertising:
Body Type:Coupe
Engine:3 Gauge
Vehicle Title:Clear
Fuel Type:Gasoline
For Sale By:Dealer
VIN: 456440 Year: 1966
Interior Color: Black
Model: 912
Number of Cylinders: 4
Trim: SWB Coupe
Warranty: Vehicle does NOT have an existing warranty
Drive Type: 5 Speed
Mileage: 62,000
Sub Model: Coupe
Exterior Color: Red
Condition: Used: A vehicle is considered used if it has been registered and issued a title. Used vehicles have had at least one previous owner. The condition of the exterior, interior and engine can vary depending on the vehicle's history. See the seller's listing for full details and description of any imperfections. ... 

1966 Porsche 912 SWB Matching Numbers Running Engine to Restore

1966 Porsche 912 SWB that is a true barn find. The car is in red with a black interior. It has a 5 speed transmission and 3 gauges on the dash. VIN # 456440; Engine # 746737; Color Code 6602. In storage for last 15 years, ran when parked. Odometer shows 61,575 miles. Car was painted in 1989. At that time both floor pans were replaced (flat metal, not stamped), rockers were replaced, all window seals replaced, carpet replaced, seats recovered. Body shows one dent in Left Front fender (pictured). Engine starts easily and runs strong. Battery pan has rust. Original Blaupunkt radio, spare wheel, jack, some tools. Very complete car, ready for restoration. More pictures and engine video are available.

We are classic car dealers located in New York, USA. More details about us are available in the “About Me” page. Visit us at Merit Cars.

Car has a clean US title. We ship worldwide. Car ships from the port of NJ. Shipping for a car of this size in a shared container to major European ports of Rotterdam, Antwerp, Bremerhaven, Le Havre or Thamesport is approx. $900. Other European ports will be slightly higher. Shipping costs to more than 45 destinations worldwide are available through “Global Shipping Information” link in the “About Me” page.
 
Please note - given the age and uniqueness of this car all sales are final. Please feel free to ask any number of questions and please feel free to ask for more pictures. You are welcome to come and inspect the car - the car is standing in College Point NY 11356 - which is about 20 minutes east of New York City. However since this car is very old we possibly cannot check each and every item on the car. As such the car is strictly sold on as-is basis and all sales are final. 
 
Winning bidder must pay a $500 deposit within 48 hours of close of auction. The final payment is to be received within 7 days of the close of auction. We only accept US bank checks and wire transfers. We reserve the right to end the auction early without notice. Please feel free to contact us if you have any more questions. Telephone is USA-347-438-1180.

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1964 Porsche 356 Cabriolet Emory Outlaw First Drive

Wed, Dec 30 2015

The black lacquer badge affixed to this 1964 Porsche 356 Cabriolet has two words on it: "356 Outlaws." When it was first produced by a jeweler in the 1980s for the Emory family, the word "Outlaw" was a term of pride only meaningful to the father-and-son team that were building these custom Porsches. Outside of their Orange County garage, the Outlaws attracted less respect than outlaw humans. In the past few years, Magnus Walker has helped Outlaws blow up outside nontraditional Porsche circles. Collector car brokers now happily promote Outlaw builds, and online how-to guides will teach you to create your own. Despite their newfound recognition, Outlaws began with Gary and Rod Emory and continue with Emory Motorsports. We didn't drive the black 1958 Porsche 356 Emory Special and silver 1959 356 Outlaw in the gallery – completed cars move through the shop so quickly that we couldn't organize a shoot and a drive on the same day. We drove a 1964 356C Outlaw that gets by with leather hood straps, deleted bumper guards, Raydot fender mirrors, and a drilled fuel filler cap poking through the hood. The interior is dressed in red leather in sanguine contrast to the beige German square weave carpet along the bulkheads. The three gauges are taken from a 904, the racer Porsche developed to succeed the 718. Emory's tuning lineage is as old as the cars he restores. Emory's tuning lineage is as old as the cars he restores. His grandfather Neil ran Valley Custom Shop in Burbank from 1948 to 1962, channeling and sectioning the slab-sided bodywork of '40s and '50s domestic sedans in ways that OEM designers would later adopt. Neil's tenure also included building the body for the SoCal Streamliner in 1950, the first hot rod to hit 200 miles per hour at the Bonneville Salt Flats. When Chick Iverson opened a Porsche dealership in Newport Beach he asked Neil to run the body shop. Neil's son Gary would become the parts manager. When he saw inventory being thrown out for lack of space, Gary then opened his own Porsche parts operation. Gary's son Rod started playing in the warehouse from the age of six, mixing and matching pieces to make go-karts and help build the Porsches Gary would sketch. Rod began his first restoration, a 1953 Porsche 356, at 14 years old. He spent two years on it, then went vintage racing. This wasn't a concours build – growing up in a parts shop, Rod had no qualms about using whatever suited his purpose and vision.

Jack Olsen built one Porsche to do it all

Wed, 23 Jan 2013

Jack Olsen has built himself a lair called the 12-Gauge Garage, and inside that garage he built a lairy Porsche 911 nicknamed Black Beauty II. Although it looks like one of Stuttgart's models from the sixties or seventies, it is actually four decades of 911 gubbins from 1965 to 2000 thrown under one shell: the lightweight body is from 1972, the transaxle from 1977, the brakes from a 1986 Turbo, the engine from 1995, for example. It weighs 2,400 pounds and it's got 272 horsepower to get it going, but it's still a pure Porsche, Olsen saying, "If you stop thinking about what you're doing, it will remind you in very abrupt ways."
Olsen said the real point has been to have one car that does it all, so he does everything in his 911 from neighborhood runs to 7-11 to track racing - he loads the aero bits in the car and bolts them on trackside. And he says he'll never stop tweaking the suspension.
You can watch and hear the rest in Olsen's words in the video below.

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